Inquiry into Women’s Pain
The Inquiry into Women’s Pain will provide recommendations to inform improved models of care and service delivery for Victorian girls and women experiencing pain in the future. The Inquiry into Women’s Pain is asking Victorian girls and women to share their experiences of pain and pain management.
The Department of Health want to hear about your experience with pain. This includes any experience of pain and pain care, treatment or service that you have had in Victoria. It also includes the experiences of healthcare workers who have worked with women and girls with pain. This could be pain from an injury or trauma, dental pain, joint pain, or musculoskeletal pain. It can also be related to heart, neurological, reproductive, autoimmune or other health conditions over your lifetime.
Department of Health are asking that you share your experience, concerns, and suggestions about your experience of pain through its survey on Engage Victoria. The survey will be open from 28 March 2024 to Wednesday 31 July 2024.
Inquiry into Women’s Pain scope
Women face real and enduring challenges when seeking care and support for pain.
Chronic pain affects a higher proportion of girls and women than men around the world; however, women are less likely to receive treatment. Research has also shown that women generally experience more recurrent pain, more severe pain, and longer-lasting pain than men.
Medical gender bias routinely leads to a denial of pain and therefore, lack of pain relief and associated treatment for women. This occurs for various health conditions, including cardiovascular, neurological, reproductive, and autoimmune conditions.
As part of the Women’s Health and Wellbeing Program, the Inquiry into Women’s Pain aims to address the challenges faced by girls and women seeking pain care. The Inquiry will provide recommendations to inform improved models of care and service delivery for Victorian girls and women experiencing pain in the future.
It will:
- provide an opportunity for girls and women from across our community to share their experiences of pain and pain management in their own words and for these experiences to be heard and acknowledged
- listen to the experiences of girls, women and clinicians to identify the barriers and enablers when accessing care, treatment and services for pain conditions
- describe the impact of the current service delivery system on care for pain conditions
- identify opportunities to improve the care, treatment and services for pain conditions
- consider appropriate models of care, service delivery frameworks, workforce skill mix and other areas requiring change
- translate research and evidence-based interventions that address unwarranted sex and gender variations and improve the equity of outcomes relating to the access and efficacy of pain management.
Safer Care Victoria, the Victorian Women’s Health Advisory Council, and the Pain Inquiry Subcommittee will lead the delivery of this inquiry.
A final report of the Inquiry into Women’s Pain will be delivered to the Victorian Women’s Health Advisory Council by December 2024.